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A Gift of Love

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  A GIFT OF LOVE   Once upon a time, in a huge forest, by a city, lived a raccoon.  He looked just like all the other raccoons with his bandit-like mask and ringed tail.  And he was very curious, just like all the other raccoons.  His name was Alexander. Christmas was a happy time for all the other animals in the forest, especially for Alexander, because it gave him a chance to go home and spend time with his mother and father, brothers and sisters, aunts, uncles, and cousins.  They would celebrate and feast and tell stories for many hours. “This Christmas is going to be special,” thought Alexander.  “It will be the first time I will be home since I began my life away from the den.  I can’t wait to see everyone again!” These thoughts made him hasten his preparations.  He knew it would take him about two days to travel home, so, the sooner he got started, the better.  After all, Christmas was but three days away! Even with the few...

Fourth Sunday in Advent (2022)

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Peace. Peace I leave with you; My peace I give to you. Not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid.   (John 14:27) We really throw words around without thinking about what they really mean. These words, so very common to the Advent season, are words we commonly use but I wonder if we really stop to think about what they mean and how we connect to them. I've already mentally wrestled with the first three this year - hope, joy, and love. Thanks to the opportunity to view a wonderful Advent series from Village Green Church in London, Ontario, and the pastor, Jon Korkidakis, I've been able to ponder his message and reflect on it. Today, I continue this.    If I were to ask people about the meaning of peace, it likely would include something like 'the absence of war or conflict' or 'a feeling of calm'. The thing is ... this can be a fleeting feeling. Bring on a calamity, a lost job or an argument, or a heal...

Third Sunday in Advent (2022)

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This Sunday - the Pink Candle. Gaudete Sunday. The Joy Candle.  "Joy" is a word heard frequently in our environment. "Find your joy" or "does this bring you joy?" or "spark joy" are catchphrases many say. I often wonder, what does that word mean. Joy. Dictionary says - a feeling of great happiness or pleasure; however, I can't help but wonder if ... somewhere back in its history, if that word didn't originally come from the word 'rejoice'. And what does that mean? To feel or show great joy or delight. The Greek root for both? Chara: this is the word to describe a feeling of inner gladness or delight.  So, this is the same as happiness, right? Joy and happiness the same thing? It would appear ... not. It seems  we use the two interchangeably, but that, in fact, is not the case. Brene Brown, she of professorship, lecturer, author, podcast host, and researcher on many interesting topics, of which leadership, courage, and ... joy...

Second Sunday in Advent (2022)

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The second candle - the Love Candle.  (Yeah, I know that different places say different things for each of the 4 candles, but go with me on this one, ok?)  Love ... this is easy, right? We know about this, we love others, there's nothing to talk about here, right? Our world is full of love! Our songs are full of love! All stories end with love, right? We can see it by looking at ourselves and those we love, right? What else is there to say? I could end this here, right?  Well, for many, this is not easy. For many, they are empty words that don't mean much. People can say "I love you" but we know that is conditional, that love often doesn't last forever. I have gone to weddings where once the couple professes to love each other ... and now, today, the hatred is palpable. There are people in my realm that have said 'I love you' and they are now gone. That 'love' was conditional and when it was no longer convenient, they withdrew that love and w...

First Sunday in Advent (2022)

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It's that time of the year again. When the end is near, we still have the craze of the holidays yet before us. The rush, the insanity, the frenzied cacophony. The world dives in ... but the Christian church pauses. This is a holy time. This is a time of reflection and preparation. Today, the First Sunday of Advent. The Sunday of Hope. I think today is the Sunday when the church would look back into history to see the predictions, what was written in the Jewish books that foretell His coming? In the midst of their agony and difficult lives under the authority of the Romans, they had hope. We, today, are caught up in anger and hatred, with war and struggle we are surrounded by. Were the ancient Jewish people caught up in similar? They were in poverty. There was sickness and oppression. It was not a good life, and it would put our struggles today to shame. But ... they had hope. They believed someone was going to come and bring redemption to them. Do we have hope? not like them. In ...